Day of the Dead

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by Lisa Brackman


  ‘But he’ll come after us.’

  ‘Probably.’

  The engine started with a rumble and a whine increasing in pitch as the propeller on the nose began to swing counterclockwise, then clockwise, joined by a lower buzz, growing louder as the plane taxied slowly from the field to the strip.

  ‘Here we go,’ Daniel said.

  The plane bumped down the strip, picking up speed, the propeller now a blur, and she almost didn’t notice when the wheels were no longer touching earth; they seemed to hover over the strip for a while and then suddenly rise into the night sky.

  Now they were above the darkened mountains. She could see the lights of a small town nestled between the peaks, a little cluster of them, like a gathering of stars.

  ‘It’s beautiful,’ she said.

  ‘Next time I’ll take you up during the day. We could follow the coast, like from L.A. to Seattle. It’s amazing.’

  He looked so pale, but maybe it was the light in the cockpit. Was there fresh blood on his shirt? She couldn’t tell.

  ‘Are you going to be okay, Danny?’

  ‘I think so. If I can’t hang, we’ll stop. I promise. But I want to get across the border first, if we can.’

  ‘Then what?’

  ‘There’s people who owe me favors,’ Daniel said. ‘And buddies of mine I don’t mind owing. Maybe they don’t have the juice that Gary does, but they’ve got some pull. Maybe it’ll be enough.’

  What if it isn’t? was the obvious question to ask, but she didn’t feel like asking it. She had the sudden notion that they could just fly like this forever, stopping now and then for fuel, taking off again, going where they wanted. That wasn’t the way life really worked, and she knew that. But for now she would pretend it was.

  We’ll land where we land, she thought. And I’ll take it from there.

  ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

  One of the best things about being an author is that I get to work with a lot of great people. It’s like finding one’s tribe.

  Many thanks to Dave Barbor, Kerry D’Agostino, Holly Frederick, Cathy Perifimos and all the great folks at Curtis Brown, especially my agent, Katherine Fausset – your support, creative insight and unfailing good humor are deeply appreciated. Besides, you like Drew Brees. This is important.

  I feel so fortunate to have landed at Soho Press, where I get to work with passionate, talented and what can I say, really nice people. I don’t know who I’d rather crash a party with than the Soho Criminals. Thank you, Bronwen Hruska for continuing the fine tradition of founding editor Laura Hruska and for adding your own vision and talent to a wonderful company. Thank you, editor Juliet Grames, for your editorial insight and for understanding that sometimes I need to be talked off a ledge. Thanks as well to Mark Doten, Michelle Rafferty, Kerrie Loyd, Ailen Lujo and Justin Hargett for your support and hard work. Thanks also to a group of Soho authors who unfailingly support each other and are just a blast to be around. Cara Black, who went out of her way to offer her friendship and advice, Tim Hallinan, the King of the Novel Café and the person I would always want to be on a panel with, Leighton Gage, Henry Chang, James Benn, Stuart Neville, Lene Kaaberbol, Agnete Friis, Jassy Mackenzie – it’s a pleasure to be your label mates.

  Thank-you, David Shoemaker, for designing a cover that I’m thrilled has my name on it, and my amazing web designer/host Ryan McLaughlin, who has been such a pleasure to work with over the last few years, and to copy editor Maureen Sugden, for her incredibly thoughtful and detailed attention to my MS and for understanding way more about commas than I ever will.

  I’m incredibly fortunate to also be published by HarperCollins UK – and I have had so much fun working with editor Jane Johnson, editor Emad Akhtar and the rest of the team there. Thanks for the blingin’ gold foil! I hope to meet all of you in person some day soon, so we can settle once and for all where the ‘rug’ in ‘rugby’ comes from.

  In my own life I’m fortunate to be surrounded by wonderful writers who have helped me immeasurably. Purgatory, Hellions, the Pit, the Fiction Writers Co-op, and of course, the Writing Wombats – all of you have been an unfailing source of cheer and support. Special thanks go out to beta readers Sherrie Super, Clovia Shaw, Sue Layborne, Jenn Nelson, Judi Fennell, Steve Prosapio, Christy Gerhart, Carol Galante and Gretchen McNeil. Other writers in my life whose support, e-mails and tweets have helped me on many a late night include Jenny Brown, Denise Dumars, Toni Dwiggins, David Fitzgerald, Jennifer Hillier, Jennifer Hubbard, Elizabeth Loupas, Jan O’Hara, Pat Shaw, and Robin Spano.

  Other friends and associates who have enriched my life, bought me booze and generally made me happy to be around, including: John Amussen and Andrea Bailey, Maryelizabeth Hart, Ben Lucas, Billy Brackenridge, Bill Galante, Richard Burger, Lisa Gollin, John Clair, Tess Amato, Jordan Foster, Ebbins Harris, Tommaso Fiacchino, Tony Mandracchia, Todd Tatum, Sarah McCarry, Jim Bickhart, Anne Fishbein, Vivian Archer and Joe Touch. I hope I haven’t forgotten anyone, though I’m sure that I have. I would be nowhere without my friends and family, and I’m grateful every day that all of you are in my life.

  The wonderful folks in Puerto Vallarta who helped me with research and generally made me feel welcome, including: Tom Williams, Chuchi TresPesos, Heidi Di, Katherine Hardin, Maureen Power Marugan, Christine Vincent, Doug Danielson and the PV Writers group.

  I owe special thanks to: Brian Thomas, for house-sitting and making sure the felines were fed and happy. Mimi Freedman and Jon Hofferman, my Buffy night companions and videographers. Dana Fredsti and Bryn Greenwood, for their multiple reads, editorial assistance, and in Bryn’s case, her ability to ‘literary it up’ when I was panicking about creating readers guides.

  I’m saving the most important thanks for last.

  There are two people who deserve special kudos: Pilar Perez, who introduced me to the city of Puerto Vallarta and without whose friendship this book never would have been written. And Nathan Bransford, my former agent, who would not let me get away with a single flabby sentence or lazy plot point. It’s a working relationship that I will always treasure.

  Finally, I would be remiss if I did not make this disclaimer: Puerto Vallarta is a beautiful, culturally vibrant city, with great restaurants, beaches and scenery, and I would not hesitate to vacation there any time. My main character’s fictional bad luck should not be taken as a disincentive to visit this wonderful place.

  About the Author

  Lisa Brackman has worked as an executive at a major motion picture studio, an issues researcher in a presidential campaign, and as the singer-songwriter & bassist in an LA rock band. She’s lived and travelled extensively in China. Brackman is a southern California native and lives in Venice, CA. Day of the Dead is her second novel, which won the Grand Prize at the Los Angeles Book Festival.

  Also By Lisa Brackman

  Year of the Tiger

  Copyright

  This novel is entirely a work of fiction.

  The names, characters and incidents portrayed in it are the work of the author’s imagination. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events or localities is entirely coincidental.

  Harper

  An imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers

  77–85 Fulham Palace Road,

  Hammersmith, London W6 8JB

  www.harpercollins.co.uk

  First published in Great Britain by HarperCollinsPublishers 2012

  First published in the USA in 2012 by Soho Press as Getaway

  Copyright © Lisa Brackmann 2012

  Lisa Brackmann asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work

  A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library

  EPub Edition © September 2012 ISBN: 978 0 00 748573 4

  All rights reserved under International Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reprodu
ced, transmitted, down-loaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.

  About the Publisher

  Australia

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  New Zealand

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  United Kingdom

  HarperCollins Publishers Ltd.

  77–85 Fulham Palace Road

  London, W6 8JB, UK

  http://www.harpercollinsebooks.co.uk

  United States

  HarperCollins Publishers Inc.

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  http://www.harpercollinsebooks.com

 

 

 


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